When you bring weed to court...

Stranger than Fiction

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When Marquis Diggs, 29, appeared at family court in Hudson County, N.J., with his mother, who was there to drop a restraining order against her son, officials learned that Diggs had several outstanding warrants and arrested him. Deputies who searched him found 32 bags of suspected marijuana in his jacket pocket. (Jersey City's The Jersey Journal)

Sheriff's deputies who arrested a mother and daughter suspected of shoplifting in Oconee County, Ga., said the mother told them the daughter couldn't be arrested because she was only 16. When asked for her date of birth, the daughter stated "02/01/1992." Informed that would make her 20, she corrected herself: "02/01/1994." When the arresting deputy explained she'd be 18 years old, "she again appeared to be counting in her head," the deputy reported, "and when she could not come up with an answer, she and [the mother] started crying uncontrollably and would no longer answer my questions." During subsequent interrogation, the mother disclosed further inconsistencies. When the deputy told the daughter she'd be booked as Jane Doe, she finally identified herself as Lavera Hammond-Jackson, 17. (Georgia's Oconee Patch)

Popularity contests

Sophie Laboissonniere, 21, pleaded guilty to rioting after the Vancouver Canucks lost the National Hockey League finals in June 2011. Shortly before the rioting, Laboissonniere, who was one of the first suspects charged, took part in a Vancouver beauty pageant and was named Miss Congeniality. (Associated Press)

Americans prefer root canals, colonoscopies, France and NFL replacement refs to Congress, according to a Public Policy Polling survey that showed only 9 percent of respondents had a favorable opinion of Congress. Eighty-five percent held an unfavorable view. "We all know Congress is unpopular," PPP president Dean Debnam said. "But the fact that voters like it even less than cockroaches, lice and Genghis Khan really shows how far its esteem has fallen with the American public." Despite its poor showing, Congress outranked North Korea, the Kardashian family and former Sen. John Edwards. (The Washington Times)

Brace yourself

The Royal & Ancient Golf Club and the U.S. Golf Association, golf's top governing organizations, proposed a ban on golfers anchoring their putters against their bellies instead of swinging them freely. "Our conclusion is that anchored strokes threaten to supplant traditional strokes, which with all their frailties are integral to the longstanding character of our sport," R&A chief executive Peter Dawson said, conceding, "We don't think putting in an anchored way is easy. You have to learn how to do it." (Associated Press)

Gun alternative

New York police accused Dominick Anderson, 27, of brutally beating his grandmother and sister with an artificial elephant tusk. He then used the 18-inch tusk to strike one of the six officers he injured as they tried to arrest him. Police said Anderson attacked the women because he believed they put him under a voodoo spell. (New York's Daily News)

Free-range prisoners

Officials in Fulton County, Ga., voted to replace more than 1,300 locks in the county jail that have been broken for more than a decade. During that time, county officials and three different sheriffs' administrations warned repeatedly that inmates can easily open doors, even those in maximum security, using soap, toilet paper, pieces of cloth or cardboard. They then roam about the jail freely, often attacking other inmates. Though the measure to install new locks passed 5-2, several commissioners felt the faulty locks wouldn't be a problem if deputies supervised inmates better. Chief Jailer Mark Adger said the new locks would cost more than $5 million and take about four months to install. (The Atlanta Journal Constitution)

Profitable flaws

The latest women's body-image worry is wobbly arms, also known, according to a newspaper caption of a photo of Madonna, as "bingo wings." British retailers Marks & Spencer, Asda and Charnos, and U.S. companies Ch'Arms and Spanx are already addressing the condition by offering arm corsets, specialized control sleeves costing between $30 and $175 that are designed specifically to hold flabby arm skin tighter. (Britain's The Observer)

Middle Eastern men are turning to mustache transplants to assert their masculinity. Plastic surgeons use a technique called follicular unit extraction, where groups of hair are moved from areas of dense growth to the upper lips, to thicken mustaches. Performed under local anesthetic, the procedure costs about $7,000, according to Paris-based surgeon Pierre Bouhanna. (CNN)

Your tax dollars

The Homeland Security Department paid $98,000 for an underwater robot in Columbus, Ohio, which has no major rivers and few lakes nearby, according to a congressional report by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., that highlights wasteful spending on alleged counterterrorism. The report notes that some cities and towns have created implausible attack scenarios to win federal grants. For instance, Peoria, Ariz., spent $90,000 to install cameras and car-bomb barriers at the spring training field shared by baseball's San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners, and officials in Clovis, Calif., deployed the police department's $200,000 armored personnel carrier to patrol an annual Easter egg hunt. At the low end of the scale, Seguin, Texas, used a $21 federal grant to buy a fish tank. (Associated Press)

Drinking-class hero

Southwest Airlines settled a class-action lawsuit filed by Chicago attorney Adam Levitt, who objected to the airline's decision to stop honoring drink vouchers it gave to passengers who bought premium-priced "Business Select" tickets. The vouchers, worth $5 each, carried no expiration date until the airline voided them when it began issuing new vouchers good only the same day. The settlement, which entitles eligible fliers to new drink vouchers, estimates the number of eligible $5 vouchers at 5.8 million, making it worth $29 million. (Chicago Tribune)

Dumb and dumber

Two Idaho men who spent the day blowing things up decided to start a fire and use some of their leftover exploding material as an accelerant. The Kootenai County Sheriff's Office said that when one of the men came close to the fire holding the materials in a bag, they exploded, injuring the man's hand and the other man's lower body. (Spokane's KREM-TV)

Love is blind

Victor Cingolani, who is serving 13 years in an Argentine prison for the murder of Johana Casas, announced plans to marry the victim's twin sister, Edith Casas, 22. Cingolani denied killing Johana, a model with whom he had a relationship, and said his relationship with her was "casual" but that he is genuinely "in love" with Edith. She maintains that Cingolani was unjustly convicted, but the twins' mother, Marcelina del Carmen Orellana, declared her daughter is "psychologically ill." (BBC News)